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The Royal Infirmary from the North East

Inglis, Alexander Adam , 1907, Postcard
The Royal Infirmary from the North East
The Royal Infirmary from the North East
The Royal Infirmary from the North East
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Category
Library Item
Item no
37925
Title
The Royal Infirmary from the North East
Description
Text on reverse reads,
'The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, founded 1728
Brief facts and figures, year to 30th September 1906 -
Indoor patients treated - 11,216
Outdoor patients treated - 37,235
Daily average number in hospital - 839

Patients are admitted purely according to the necessity and urgency of their cases, and of their suitability for Hospital treatment.
Every county in Scotland benefits - the Charity is not a local but a national one.
Ordinary expenditure - £52, 116 7 4
Ordinary income - £33 695 4 2
Deficiency for the year - £18,421 3 2

Owing to the legacies and donations of £100 and upwards not being sufficient to meet this deficiency and the Extra-ordinary Expenditure, the Managers, to their deep regret, were compelled to draw a large sum from the invested funds.
Each In-patient cost, on an average, £5. As there were 4327 cases from the country towns and districts, their treatment represented an outlay of nearly £22,000. The contributions received from the country amounted to little over £9000.
The Institution was never doing more work or better work, and its wants are therefore proportionately greater now than in the past.

Please support Scotland's leading Charity.'
Artist / maker
Date
1907
Size
8.8 x 13.8
Type